Sunday, 10 April 2016

Not quite a travelogue - Part 1

[I wrote a few short stories many years ago. Apart from 'A Valentine's Day Story', I've not posted any up here on the blog. That's because I always figured they would have some commercial value if I ever became a famous writer. Now that I realise how laughable that thought is, here it is, in it's unvarnished glory -

“What the @#$%!! Back to work, then,” and I went at
the cable wire with my screwdriver again.

Every now and then I reach the conclusion that the quality of Cable TV
at the House of Elver is pathetic. Since asking the Cable Guy to rectify the
situation is about as likely to bear fruit as a lamp-post, the steps I take
consist of fiddling with the cable wire that hangs outside the balcony of my
bedroom, precariously balanced on the railing, while Fenderis tries to adjust
the fine-tuning and reports to me whether the picture is any better. This
exercise is always futile, but I pursue it nevertheless, which only goes to
show that there is a bit of Sisyphus in all of us.

On this occasion, after about half-an-hour of fruitless labour, I was
about ready to call it quits, when I happened to look down onto the lawn. For a
moment I thought that someone had lit a fire in the garden. Everything looked the colour bright flame. Then cooler counsel
prevailed, and I realised that I was being paid a visit by Princess Ariel, my
long-suffering girlfriend. Her hair varies from strawberry blonde to a deep crimson depending on the light, but by the setting sun, it's always flame-red. She’s really one of the nicest people in the world, apart from being one
of the hottest, which says it all, really. We get along very well, except for
the fact that I neglect her terribly and she cheats on me from time to time.

“Hullo, Ariel,” I said, waving down.

“What are you doing up there? You’ll fall off! Get
down here this instant!” she yelled back up.

“Right ho,” I said, and leaped off the railing onto the lawn, falling
with a loud-ish sound on the tarmac and, I daresay, giving quite a nasty shock
to several families of frogs and snails.

“Jormund, you idiot! You must’ve broken all your
bones. Don’t you have any brains?”

“That won’t be necessary, Jormund, Ariel had best keep her hands to
herself if she knows what’s good for her.”

I froze. The voice was unmistakable. Turning my head behind me, I
confirmed that I had not made a mistake. And sure enough, there stood the Queen
Tigress, my mother, accompanied by Papa Jormundgandr. I struggled to my feet
and performed my best imitation of a municipality tap.

“Stop gurgling and let us in,” came the command from
the Queen.

“Err…ummm…I mean…yes…of course.” I said, and then looked up at the
balcony over which Fenderis was leaning, and hissed,“open the door, you mutt.”

“Right ho,” he hissed back and bounded off.

In a few minutes we were all inside, with the fireplace crackling
merrily. Papa Jormund was comfortably settled in my favourite armchair, the
Queen Tigress was regally seated on the other chair, Fenderis was sitting on the
carpet before the fire and Ariel was warming her hands before it. I stood
nervously next to the fireplace, shifting my weight from one foot to another.

“Err...coffee?” I asked, finally.

There seemed to be a general consensus that this was a good idea, so I
kicked Fenderis on his right flank. He trotted off into the kitchen. There
followed one of those uncomfortable silences that always tend to descend on the
Elver house when the parents visit. Presently Fenderis returned carrying five
cups of coffee on a tray. A few sips of Cappuccino later I felt much better and
actually able to carry on a conversation.

“So, mother, ah, well, what brings you, uhm, aah,
here?”

She glanced around the room disapprovingly.

“Why don’t you ever clean up around here?”

“Of course I do!” I protested, “I cleaned up as
recently as...last September!”

She gave me another disapproving glance.

“Anyway, I don’t think you’ll ever learn to live in a
decent environment.”

I made non-committal sounds.

“What I wanted to tell you is that we are going to visit the shrine of
Freyja this weekend, so get your bags packed.”

“What? What what what? We are going where? And why? And who’s we?” I
said, reeling. If Fenderis hadn’t propped himself against my knees I’d have
fallen to the ground.

“We. Us. Your father, me, you and Ariel.”

“Why? Where IS this Shrine of Freyja? Why do you want
me to come?”

“Look here, Jormund,” said the Queen Tigress, wagging a reproachful
finger in my direction, “You’ve been leading a dissolute life for too long” –
my protests here were masterfully ignored – “and you’ve kept this poor delicate
girl waiting for ever so long without taking her seriously at all” – here she
patted Ariel’s head gingerly, in a manner reminiscent of a wounded man touching
the most painful part of the wound–“and
I want you two to visit the shrine and get Freyja’s blessings. It’s only fair.”

“Blessings for what?” I asked, getting straight to the
point.

“A happy life together, that’s what!” the Queen flared up, “I’m sick of
your not taking her seriously” – here she threw her coffee-cup at me and caught
me smartly at the ear –“and her cheating on you” – here she pulled Ariel’s hair
and made her cry out –“You two are going to come to the shrine and I’m going to
ask for both of you to find some direction in your life.”

The words rang in my ears like the ringers on those old ring-dialing
phones. I clutched at the mantelpiece for support.

“But, but, isn’t it ever so far away?” I asked.

“You know the thing is,” she said, ignoring me, “I don’t even blame this
poor girl. The way you neglect her, it’s awful.”

Ariel, who’s never missed an opportunity to display her flair for
melodrama, promptly started sobbing.

“Isn’t the shrine, like, way in the interior?” I asked
again.

“So it is,” replied the Queen, “I have booked us all onto a bus. We
leave tomorrow evening. Here’s your ticket”

“But that’s too far!” I protested again, “think of the distance! And
it’s a drought-prone area! How are we supposed to…survive so long without
water? I’m a sea-serpent! Ariel here is Posiedon’s grand-daughter! We both need
water!”

“Oh don’t be ridiculous, Jormund! It’s only one day.
I’m not leaving you there for posterity!”

“But,” I said, this time with a little more conviction, “I have to
study! I have textbooks to read! And papers to solve! And promises to keep! And
miles to go before I sleep, and miles to go before I sleep!”

For a moment I thought she wavered. She gave some signs of thinking
about what I just said. And then Fenderis had to shove his oar in.

“Besides, Aunt Tigress,” he said earnestly, “Jormund here promised to
take me pub-hopping this weekend to celebrate my exams being over.”

That settled the issue.

“Pub-hopping!” said Papa Jormund disapprovingly.

Ariel burst into tears.

“See, mother? He’d rather go pub-hopping than spend
time with me! Such a rotten boyfriend he is.”

“You poor girl,” said my mother, patting Ariel’s cheek comfortingly,
“Jormund, you will be packed and ready at the Bus-stand tomorrow evening. I
don’t want to hear anything more on the subject.”

And with those words, she swept out of the room, Papa and Ariel in tow.
Ariel turned back at the door to stick her tongue out at me. When they were
safely out of the driveway I slowly walked over to the door and shut it. Then I
turned around and glowered at Fenderis. He was brushing his fur nonchalantly.

I pounced onto his back and held him fast in a triple-cross-face.

“You miserable mutt,” I screamed, “what did you have
to go about opening your stupid mouth for?”

“I’m sorry,” he yelped through clenched teeth.

I merely tightened my grip further.

“Get off me, Jormund, you ass.”

“I’ll make you pay, you mangy piece of fur!” I said
and brought down a punch on his face.

But he knew me all too well.

“What strikes me, Jormund, is that all this aggression
stems from your phobia of COMMITMENT.”

No other word in the English Language has quite the same ability to
reduce me to a damp piece of blotting paper. My limbs went limp. I released him
and rolled myself into a corner, hiding my face in my hands.

“Woe is me,” I said melodramatically, borrowing a page
from Ariel’s book.

“It’s all right, old chap,” said Fenderis, “It might
not be so bad.”

I glanced up and stared at him.

“Oh you’ll find out, my dear cousin, you’ll find out. I’m booking you
onto this bus with us as well. And don’t even think of wriggling out of this
one!”

I ignored the murderous look he gave me and proceeded
to call the travel agent.

6 comments:

That was a really enjoyable read. I really love your Ariel - Jormund pieces. The humor part is really good. But I am yet to get a hang of when and where of the story's setting. Maybe I missed the pieces that had them.

You know you should have kept this locked up, not that I am complaining. When you wrote exercise is futile--I don't know, word association perhaps brought back welcome memories of Six of Nine Borg'ing out Resistance is Futile!! A well cherished memory.

When will you put Ariel out of her misery? And if you have, it is time we got to read about Jormund's travails of the hitched kind.

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About Me

Percy Slacker was bitten by Schrodinger’s Cat as a child, and has since then combined a deep fear of cats with an
abiding conviction that he both exists and does not exist at the same
time. This existential doubt has led him
to grow up to be a writer while not actually being a writer.

He lives in Mumbai with his family, his book collection and a firm
conviction that modern civilization is in an interminable decline.